Sometimes
in September this year, I left Olabisi Onabanjo University at 3pm, hoping to
get to Lagos around 5pm but I was on the road till 11pm! That day, I spent 3
hours at one spot in Shagamu. On 8/11/19, I came in from the East, got to Ijebu-Ode
around 11 am but I could not get to Lagos until 4 hours later. Ijebu-Ode to
Lagos ordinarily takes 1 hour. On 9/11/19, I left Kingsway Road Ikoyi around
8pm, got to Carter Bridge within 15 minutes but I was in traffic for 2 hours on
Carter Bridge without covering up to 500 meters. Of late, moving into, out of
or within Lagos has become an impossible task. The government (Federal and
State), just got up one morning and decided to construct all the roads in and
around Lagos simultaneously and they are doing so at a snail-speed. Thus, Lagos
to Ibafo, Oworonsoki-Anthony-Oshodi-Cele route; the Aponpon axis in the Island,
the Agege Motor Road and Badagry expressway are all under construction. All
these entail total and partial closure of roads.
Unfortunately, the Ikorodu to
Ijebu-Ode and Shagamu routes cannot be described as roads even by the most
charitable commentator. It was when I was thinking about these, as I was stranded
on Carter Bridge on 9/11/19, that I remembered an article with the above title
which I wrote in 2002. (See Ik Muo, if Lagos should Run, The National Interest
(of blessed memory), 8/3/02, p11). Whenever I resort to my archives, I want you
to determine for yourself how far we have progressed or regressed as a nation.
So, read on…
During
the Biafran war of self-preservation, a town is said to have ‘RUN’ if it was
overtaking by the rampaging and brutal federal troops. Frightened and displaced
residents clutching their miserable possessions, with their malnourished and Kwashiorkor-friendly
kids in tow, would troop to any village as far as their strength would allow,
where they become refugees. It was then common to say that Town X or Town Y ‘a
gbago oso’ (had run). I recalled this scenario about 4 years ago (1998) and
wondered what it would look like if Lagos should RUN! In fact, I started this
article then but it became an abandoned project.
That
was the day one container fell atop a car at the stadium flyover, Surulere (as
they still do in 2019)! Somebody had invited me for a chat at his office in Surulere
and I had promised to be there within 30 minutes. Everything was moving
smoothly until I got to Alaka Bus-Stop. What I saw defied any form of
explanation or rationalization. Everybody was driving in every direction,
blaring their horns, with their full and hazard lights on, making U-Turns and
literarily throwing all driving principles and practices, and even common
sense, upside down. This was caused by drivers from Ojuelegba (mostly
commercial busses) taking over both sides of the road and forming about 10
lanes. The oncoming vehicles did not have the good luck of even a single lane
and as a result, CHAOS became manifest. When I got to Surulere around 9pm (the
journey started around 3.30pm), my friend had gone home for the day and I
returned home at Okota around 12 midnight because the single stadium madness affected
all parts of Lagos.
Even
without an extreme traffic crisis like this one, just try and observe the
traffic situation at Mile 2, Ojota, Oshodi, CMS or Ago-Palaceway, at either 7am
or 7pm, Monday to Friday and imagine what would happen if a whistle were blown
and everybody asked to get out of Lagos. If this happens, you will be sure that
nobody will leave because nobody will allow anybody else to leave! This will be
due to gross indiscipline, disregard for traffic rules and I Before Others
mentality which makes commonsense, very scarce. There is poor road network with
limited exit routes (and Lagos-Ibadan Express Way has been taken over by
Churches, which always disperse when the road is at the busiest. Other factors
include self-imprisonment with barricades in the name of security, lack of
emergency and crises management skills, institutions and awareness, too many
vehicles on the road( some are vehicles only in name), excesses of the drivers,
policemen who will run away before anybody and of course, area boys who will
mount toll gates every inch of the way. I prayed that Laos would never have to
‘run’ even though I had a feeling that it was a possibility though with a low
probability
However,
on 27/1/02, it happened! An act of men (carelessness, sabotage, mischief,
negligence power-play) led to a horror that affected only a small part of Lagos
(The Ikeja multiple bomb explosions) and more people died in the process of
trying to escape than from the actual explosions.
May
be, I was lucky. I was returning from IgboUkwu development Union meeting and
saw people driving furiously along the Ago-Palace at around 6.45pm on that day
and when nobody could tell me the why, what and where of the run, I decided to
drive on and got home in one piece. That was partly because I remembered one
day when I missed my way and made a U-Turn and immediately all the vehicles
behind me automatically made U-turns. It is in our character as Lagosians.
Panic and confusion took over the land as people ran without knowing what they
were running from or where they were running to; public information was poor as
all sorts of frightening speculations had free reign; security agencies were as
usual caught napping and coordination as haphazard.
Even as I write this 12 days later, it has been
a theatre of the absurd. The national mourning was half-heartedly declared and there was no
evidence of its observance; the presidential relief committee is based in
Abuja, about 1000kms away from the ‘war-front’, relief efforts are not being
properly coordinated as various bodies and organs appear to be pursuing
different relief agenda and even the ethics of distributing the materials is a
very big issue… The wind has blown and we have seen the anus of the foul. Our
tendency to run whenever others are running, the insensitivity and
lackadaisical attitude of Government agencies, the absence of any serious
emergency management system, poor maintenance culture and lack of attention to
potentially dangerous issues are the root causes of this self-inflicted injury
and as in our character, we will soon forget about the incident and life goes
on. We will not learn any lessons from the sad incidence; we will not even know
the real causes of the calamity; nobody will be cautioned for criminal
negligence or non-performance and nothing will be done to make us better
equipped to handle this kind of emergency in future.
What happened was very monumental but we will
still count ourselves lucky. What if Nigeria had been ‘Afghanistanised’ and
bombs exploded simultaneously at Oshodi, Orile, 3rd mainland bridge, CMS and
Ojota? What if we had an earthquake which many countries ‘enjoy’ regularly?
What if the Mozambican flood had ‘visited’ us? We thank God that all the armories
in Lagos did not explode on that day, for the rapid response of local divers
who were not waiting for orders from above and were not grumbling over unpaid
salaries; that it happened on a Sunday when many schools and offices were
closed and Oshodi was not so busy, for our unusual ability to absorb all sorts
of shocks, for the members of the international community who literally wept
more than the bereaved and for the Red Cross
unfettered by officialdom and the ever-generous Nigerians that donated
and donated
Mass
burial of the of some of the victims
So, almost 18 years later, what will it look
later of Lagos should RUN?
Other matters: Buhari’s Ministers and the NEW truth
About
2020 years ago, Pilate asked Jesus Christ, that amateur carpenter from one
small village and who confounded the great religious leaders and lawyers of his
days, what is truth? (John, 18:38) In this year of our Lord 2019, one of my
colleagues. Professor Abosede believes that there are three sides to the truth:
my side, your side and the other side. I have not interrogated the matter
myself or asked him whether it is possible for these three sides to conjoin.
This treatise on truth is due to some ‘truths’ coming from some of Buhari’s
Ministers. The first TRUTH was the declaration by the Minister of Agriculture
and Rural Development, Sabo Nanono during a press briefing to mark the World
Food Day celebration, that the cry of hunger by some Nigerians is laughable
because Nigeria produces enough food to feed herself and feed other
neighboring countries and that food is cheap. He said when people say that
there is hunger in the land, I just Laugh! (he forgot to give Chief Obasanjo
credit for this). It was similar to what his ‘brother’ Umaru Dikko, said years
ago, that there was no hunger in the Land because Nigerians were not yet eating
from Dustbins.
People
are hungry, and have actually started eating from the dustbins but the only
solace from the Minister of agriculture is to Laugh and tell us publicly that
he laughed over the matter! Anyway, I
wonder when he last fed himself and which
market his wives do their purchases from.
Another
truth is the declaration by Fashola that Nigerian roads are not that Bad. I
don’t know when Fashola plied any of our roads last but I want to throw a
challenge. Let him drive from Ikorodu to Ijebu-ode, Ikorodu to Shagamu and from
Onitsha to Enugu and after that, we can compare notes. At this juncture I still
restate this question, which somebody had asked before; why must we have
road-worthy vehicles to ply roads that are not vehicle worthy?
Anyway,
these are the type of truths from people on com-and-chop assignments, people
who live off our resources, people who are so beclouded by officialdom that
they do not see with the eyes of ordinary people.
However, we the people know
the real truth.
Ik Muo, PhD
Department of Business Administration, OOU 08033026625; muoigbo@yahoo.com, muo.ik@oouagoiwoye.edu.ng
The untold hardship and suffering unleashed on the masses by these two dangerous enemies (bad roads and hunger) are beginning to have voices and even cry aloud. God have mercy and prevent us from any form of RUN, if not...
ReplyDeleteOlatunji Taiwo
Doctoral Student
OOU